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BEN MINERS /GET T Y IMA GE S S1

COMPLEXITY

COMPLEXITY

COMPLEXITY

COMPLEXITY

COMPLEXITY

COMPLEXITY

As cloud technology matures, enterprises

that depend on the cloud for new

revenue streams need the help of trusted

partners to take the next step

MADE SIMPLE

Today, it pays to have your head in the cloud. Digital transformation trends are compelling

enterprises of all sizes to adopt software-as-a-service (SaaS) solutions at a record pace. And, as companies are challenged to drive innovation, their approach to cloud is often synonymous with their success.

But as cloud goes mainstream across the enterprise, many companies realize they need to step back to take a more strategic approach to get the most out of their cloud investment, as well as avoid common pitfalls in their cloud transformation journey.

They’re also realizing that they need to look to experienced vendors who can provide a more complete set of end-to-end workflows of mission-critical applications, coupled with deep knowledge and expertise across industries and lines of business.

For some years now, businesses have been using cloud as an integral part of their software and infrastructure strategy. Early concerns about security and costs quickly gave way to compelling benefits in innovation, as well as new ways of engaging customers, partners and suppliers.

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D ATA : I D C S3

WHICH OF THE FOLLOWING TASKS RELATED TO CLOUD

HAS YOUR ORGANIZATION ALREADY IMPLEMENTED?

Ability to use cloud

to drive business

innovation, agility and

competitive advantage

All respondents

Optimized respondents

Consistent processes to

identify which

applications can best

benefit from cloud

Processes to share and

reuse templates and best

practices across internal

cloud projects

Collaborative business

and IT governance to

define cloud

manage-ment policies and SLAs

This approach focuses primarily on the tasks that “keep the lights on”—specifically,

the pilot projects that crop up and are

driven by the needs of individual decision makers within an

organization.

BUSINESS OUTCOME

At this stage, companies begin to develop a knowledge of the busi-ness of cloud computing

for immediate, tactical needs. With a newfound

appreciation of what it entails, they vow not to be caught flat-footed

again.

Since it’s also clear now that strategic cloud adoption can eliminate inefficiencies in business processes, as well as identify new revenue streams, it’s no wonder companies want to get on board. A recent report by industry analyst firm IDC, sponsored by SAP, predicts that worldwide spending on public cloud services for businesses will reach $127 billion in 2018. Nearly 80 percent of organizations interviewed want to use cloud, and about 40 percent are already using it to drive their business.

“Cloud users are realizing benefits that impact business directly via agility, simplicity, collaboration and innovation,” says Robert Mahowald, Program Vice President at IDC’s SaaS and Cloud Services practice.

Typically, cloud adoption begins in ad-hoc ways for most companies, with business units bypassing their IT department to get quick access to SaaS applications for specific needs. However, this approach creates potential security gaps, lack of integration and cloud application sprawl. At best, it leads to customers not fully benefiting from their cloud investments; at worst, chaos.

What needs to happen is a process that IDC says entails five distinct stages before a company achieves the Holy Grail of being a mature, cloud-centric organization. In larger firms aiming to integrate their cloud strate-gies, the first step is to align the IT and LOB teams across shared business priorities. This collaboration far exceeds any other strategy in helping companies use SaaS to realize and achieve organizational goals.

“Cloud is becoming a primary platform for business as organizations are freed from the constraints of building and maintaining infrastructure and can instead focus on advancing their core business,” said Rob Glickman, Vice President, Global Audience Marketing at SAP, one of the world’s largest software companies that offers clients a comprehensive portfolio of cloud strategies.

“Business units must partner with IT as their strategic arm to help them serve cus-tomers and win,” Glickman adds. “Unwieldy silos of multiple SaaS applications create chaos that destroys customer value over time. Put simply, a collaborative approach between IT and the business is the most important element of a mature cloud strategy.”

It’s worth doing right: According to IDC, organizations whose use of cloud they classify as mature become 10 times better in their allocation of IT staff resources to strategic vs. “keeping the lights on” tasks. That’s because maturity in cloud lets them focus on strategy versus day-to-day operations, allowing them to provision new services faster, reduce IT costs and drive more revenue.

While the end goal is clear, the IDC survey shows that many companies are naive about their level of cloud maturity; they typically believe themselves to be one to two stages beyond where they actually are. The key reasons are a significant shortage of skilled IT professionals, and a lack of understanding of the strategic approach, and the business-process changes, necessary to advance to the next level.

There are five categories of cloud

maturity, each of which comes with its

own set of IT tasks— and significant business outcomes THE ROAD TO CLOUD MATURITY

THE ROAD

TO CLOUD

MATURITY

There are five stages of cloud maturity, each of

which comes with its own set of IT tasks—and significant business outcomes

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51% 49% 52% 48% 40% 39% 41% 36%

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By and large,

it is good to share.

But at times,

it’s best to hold

on to what is yours.

Take the public cloud. It’s good for many things,

but for production applications with sensitive data,

where the client needs to be protected?

Private cloud provides the smarter choice.

At Dimension Data, we’re transforming the

private cloud experience, so that more companies can have

dedicated cloud service that is secure, agile, and resilient—

anywhere, at any time, while paying only for what is used.

From your favorite sweets to a bar of soap — some things are never worth sharing. Tweet your favorite examples to @DiDataCloud or visit https://twitter.com/didatacloud,

then visit www.dimensiondata.com/sharenomore to see how you can win.

The Cloud. Now private. From Dimension Data.

#SHARENOMORE

#SHARENOMORE

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“It’s a wakeup call to these companies that they need partners with skills to route them to their destination,” says Mahowald. “Companies that want to develop their use of cloud will most likely be looking to their incumbent software providers for a road-map to becoming cloud-mature.”

SMOOTHING THE SPEED BUMPS

In addition to cost predictability and ubiqui-tous access, another overarching attraction for business adopters of cloud has been speed. But as companies evolve in their use of new technologies, and become more mature about cloud use, they’ve been hitting challenging roadblocks and are looking for help to overcome these hurdles.

“All verticals in the markets that we sell into, and the customers in the Global 2000 and beyond, are dealing with this problem of deploying new types of services to end customers at a high rate of speed,” says Brian Emerson, Senior Director of Product Management for Cloud Management and DevOps at BMC.

Emerson points out that, in the past, enter-prises had to deal with smaller sets of applica-tions that only required software updates once or twice a year. Today, however, as traditional businesses are transform-ing into digital enter-prises, companies are

dealing with hundreds or even thousands of applications, and businesses expect them to be updated on a weekly or daily basis— and in some cases every hour.

At first, when businesses needed fast access to infrastructure, speed dwarfed other concerns. And when business units felt that IT departments took too long to de-liver, they bypassed them. “Shadow IT was a starting point that served a need, particu-larly in the test phase, where application teams needed fast access to infrastructure because of the number of releases they were dealing with,” Emerson explains.

But as companies transition from an ad-hoc, shadow IT development stage to maturity, the drive for speed has been reined in by the governance and controls that need to be in place when new services are rolled out into production environments. “As soon as you say, ‘Cloud infrastructure and services need to support the end-to-end lifecycle of applications,’ then you start caring about things such as governance, controls,

security and compliance,” Emerson explains. “Once something is released into the produc-tion environment, these become critical.”

As a result, the whole notion of speed gets turned upside down. Emerson notes that the more mature digital companies are running into a challenge: While they can provision the core infrastructure quickly, the service isn’t ready to be made available to business consumers because of the other range of elements that need to be stitched together to make sure the service can be managed in the production environment. This orchestration turns out to be a slow process—something as simple as configuring how and where a server connects into the network—that can hold up deployments, sometimes for weeks.

“BMC found that while only 25 percent of a customer’s application deployment time was consumed by the infrastructure provi-sioning piece, making sure the right process-ing controls were in place took up the rest,” he says. “These things—the orchestration, the IT process integration and thinking about

management—consume that other 75 percent of the time it takes to make a service available. The challenge is figuring out how all of that can be automated as part of the total delivery process.”

Digital Enterprise Automation, one of the disciplines of BMC’s Digital Enterprise Man-agement framework for helping businesses in their digital transformation, delivers a modern automation platform that aims to marry the speed businesses are asking for with proper controls to ensure security for all digital services.

“One of the things we’ve done with our products is make it possible to automate not just the infrastructure-provisioning piece of it, but also that other 75 percent of the deployment process,” Emerson says. “Our premise is that if you figure out how to auto-mate it all, and if you can do that in the right way, then it will really enable the speed and agility businesses are asking for.”

Enabling safe deployments is essential. As companies mature, they need to maintain a safe, secure and compliant IT environment in a dangerous, hacker-infested world. With-out proper controls, businesses are looking at a Sony or Target magnitude security fiasco waiting to happen all over again.

Emerson says that when a company provisions something to the public cloud,

Businesses begin to scale up access to standardized IT resources via the cloud

at increased speed and lower cost. A focus

is also placed on app virtualization.

BUSINESS OUTCOME

This stage inspires buy-in to cloud resources and an acknowledgement that a company-wide approach is needed. As a result, businesses begin to experiment with short-term improvements in access to IT resources

via the cloud.

27%

Time to provision increases by this amount between stage 1 and stage 2

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MATURITY

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AS COMPANIES MATURE, THEY NEED

TO MAINTAIN A SAFE, SECURE AND

COMPLIANT IT ENVIRONMENT.

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AD

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INTRODUCING

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THE CLOUD

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as soon as it is up and running, hackers attack the systems, trying to use things like standardized passwords for application packs as the means to get access.

“If a developer deploys a workload into the public cloud with your company’s proprietary code and someone gets access, it can really expose your business,” he warns. “So it’s become really important that all workloads, whether development or production, are locked down. That’s why a lot of customers are starting to have concerns about shadow IT usage; it is starting to expose the overall organization to a massive amount of risk.”

What mature cloud businesses want now is greater security, governance and manage-ment capabilities, without losing the speed to which they’ve grown accustomed. Emerson says that BMC’s Cloud Lifecycle Management solution offers the speed that development teams want, with a proper governance model that ensures workloads are not exposed to risk when provisioned in the public cloud.

The lower risk high-speed environment that businesses want is possible by using BMC solutions that orchestrate infrastruc-ture automation along with IT process integration. “We enable speed by thinking about all those things that have to happen behind the scenes, once the infrastruc-ture is provisioned to make it available,” says Emerson. “It requires a lot of strong automation and orchestration capabilities, and we’ve developed powerful tools, such as our BladeLogic Datacenter Automation suite, that allow businesses to do advanced server configuration, including comprehen-sive automation for things like compliance.”

Besides focusing on speed as a major component of its toolkit for businesses becoming digitally mature, BMC’s macro strategy is built around its Digital Enterprise Management set of products. This portfolio helps IT transform businesses, with disci-plines that include not only Digital Enterprise Assurance as discussed above, but also:

Digital Service Management: a groundbreaking new paradigm for IT Service Management (ITSM), based on a forward-looking and human-centric view of how IT is transforming employee productivity and driv-ing innovation in the era of digital services.

Digital Service Acceleration: combines sophisticated data collection and analytic capabilities with advances in predictive intelligence to give a more complete view of service quality and a dramatic boost in performance and efficiency.

Digital Infrastructure Optimization:

helps businesses dynamically predict and match service capacity to business needs across a wide variety of digital infrastructure, including servers, virtual infrastructure, pri-vate and hybrid clouds and the mainframe. All of the components of Digital Enter-prise Management share an Actionable Intelligence layer that collects and stores IT and business analytics; a Security and Risk Mitigation layer, to protect the company’s intellectual assets; and an Open Integration layer that caters to external cloud provid-ers, third-party management services and service providers with products that are agnostic to existing hardware.

For its customer base, which represents 82 percent of Fortune 500 companies,

IT processes become employee-facing, enabling agile access to IT resources through aggressive measurement and standardization. It is at this stage that automation is underway. BUSINESS OUTCOME

Now with concrete evidence of the cost

and business value of their technology options in the cloud, businesses begin

to formalize the coordination between

business and IT for external sourcing.

29%

Businesses that advance to stage 3 experience this reduction in IT costs

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MATURITY

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Emerson says that BMC’s competitive mes-sage for Cloud Management is what it calls “Trusted Cloud,” which centers on the notion that if you want to deliver dynamic cloud infrastructure, you need to do it within the context of how a company thinks about its existing IT processing governance models.

Says Emerson: “By tying fast provisioning with all these other things around IT process integration, management readiness and orchestration, BMC enables you to operate a cloud that can be trusted by your organiza-tion to reduce the risk you’re exposed to, while still ensuring that you can deliver the speed that your business is asking for.”

A SHIFT IN STORAGE

As they mature in their use of cloud, busi-nesses face the challenges of optimizing their use of storage to get better value, and of handling complex data migrations from their storage solutions to more advanced and cheaper storage.

“Data growth is exploding, so customers are looking for simplicity,

better value and a larger return on invest-ment,” says Gary Quinn, President and CEO of FalconStor, a software developer at the forefront of the multibillion-dollar industry shift to software-defined storage. “SDS can simplify very complex data management situations,

and that’s what we find businesses want as they continue to develop their cloud adoption: Simple, easy-to-use solutions.”

In May, FalconStor released FreeStor, a new product that uses a single, hardware-agnostic management interface to simplify data migration, continuity, protection, recovery and optimization for any storage environment. The product was designed with an intelligent abstraction layer that optimizes storage resources—regardless of type, connectivity, brand or speed—to sim-plify data management and give businesses the ability to control data seamlessly across legacy, modern and virtual environments, including new storage options such as hybrid cloud, SDS and flash memory.

Since its release, FreeStor has been making inroads in targeted markets. One is the flash-hardware manufacturers—Nimble, Kaminario, Pure and others—who need software to complement their hardware prod-ucts. The company has also seen FreeStor used by service providers that are building

and hosting private clouds for Global 2000 customers, and by large enterprises that want to use OpenStack, a VMware competitor. The added value is that there’s no vendor lock-in to specific hardware, networks or protocols.

“Over the years, customers have bought from many different vendors in the storage space, and now they find they have a very disparate portfolio of storage silos,” Quinn says. “As they marry legacy products from established vendors with flash units, it in-evitably causes confusion and inefficiencies. Customers are looking to manage this com-plex environment as easily as possible, and the best solution is one that doesn’t depend on any proprietary hardware.”

FreeStor also makes short work of moving data and apps from a customer’s disparate legacy environments into other storage, including cloud solutions. “We have 15 years of experience in software and have developed a proprietary, patented technology called MicroScan, a replica-tion de-duplicareplica-tion technology to minimize

bandwidth and storage requirements,” Quinn says. “It’s WAN-opti-mized, and cost-effective since it’s a very efficient data mover across wide area networks.”

Adding to its attrac-tiveness, FreeStor comes with a simplified pricing model for data storage: $350 per terabye per year, or 3 cents per gigabyte per month. “It gives a customer complete flexibility on the type of storage that they buy, the projects that they have, the location they are looking to use and how they pay,” Quinn says. “And they only pay us for FreeStor as they grow.”

A SEAMLESS TRANSITION

The ability to cut costs when making a transition to the cloud is likely to drive the growth of providers that provide the full range of services an organization needs to optimize its cloud utilization, says Charlie Burns, VP of Research with IT analyst firm Saugatuck Technology, an ISG business.

“One trend we’ve seen is a move toward greater use of managed and professional services, both for migrating a workload to a cloud, and then actually operating the applications and workloads on an ongoing basis on the cloud infrastructure,” he says. The reason is twofold. Over the past few years, companies have come to realize that using cloud to its fullest potential requires

Now that IT doubles as a service center, companies at this stage

incorporate structure and quantitative

perfor-mance measurement.

BUSINESS OUTCOME

This level of maturation creates business opportunities by using

both internal and external cloud assets

and weighing risks against rewards. It is expanding a consistent,

enterprise-wide best practices approach to the cloud,

speeding iterative cycles to increase value

to the business unit.

4%

Advancing to stage 4 leads to an increase in revenue growth

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MATURITY

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“CUSTOMERS ARE LOOKING FOR SIMPLICITY, BETTER VALUE AND A LARGER RETURN ON INVESTMENT.”

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a set of skills that their internal IT depart-ments often don’t have. Besides the skills shortage, these companies have to adjust the way that they manage the scale and flexibility of cloud. And by choosing cloud providers that also provide managed ser-vices, they gain savings by avoiding capital outlay for hardware and software and cure the skills gap at the same time.

“The next step is going to be when IT organizations realize that they literally do not want to be in the business of operating cloud workloads anymore,” Burns says. “We already see this trend in mid-sized enterprises that want IT to be strategic and are ready to hand off tactical management to a cloud provider.”

It’s a trend, he says, that bodes well for companies like Dimension Data, the $7.2 billion global IT solutions and full-service cloud provider that offers public, private and hybrid cloud in 18 data centers on six con-tinents. The company provides customers with a complete range of services—includ-ing network integration, security operations, threat management and converged com-munications, as well as related management and support services—so they can acceler-ate time-to-value when implementing new products. These types of managed services simplify cloud adoption and mitigate risk associated with the transformation.

“Dimension Data provides a compre-hensive set of services they call Cloud

Surround™, and their subject matter experts work with customers on how to plan for cloud migration and carry out the imple-mentation of the cloud infrastructure,” says Burns. “It’s a one-stop shop able to handle whatever the customer wants to do.”

Dimension Data’s slogan is “We’re hands on so our clients can be hands free.” This month, Dimension Data is rolling out what it calls a “right-sized” private cloud solution so that smaller companies, which lack large IT staffs and budgets, can take advantage of the benefits provided by a dedicated cloud. Dimension Data can implement a private cloud in the customer’s data center, or in any off-premises data center, and then manage it remotely for them. In a sense, IT becomes the cloud services provider.

Ultimately—as the complexities of achieving maturity in the cloud become more apparent, and as cloud service providers offer more in terms of savings and assistance—for many companies, the journey to optimize their use of cloud technologies is likely to end up being a “hands-off” approach.

“Since it saves companies money, and allows slimmed-down IT departments to become innovative, customers will realize that this is what they need to do,” Burns concludes. “That shift will lead to a dra-matic increase in the amount of managed services they use, and that’s the trend we’re seeing emerge now.” — John O’Mahony

BRIDGING THE IT SKILLS GAP

Nearly 90% of customers have a “strong desire” for building a hybird cloud organization in the next two years, but there exists a 50% skills

gap for most organizations to achieve their goals. Specifically:

Businesses achieve a level of excellence,

highlighted by feedback loops that allow for continuous improvement. An internal

sourcing structure is driven by clear value to

the businesses.

BUSINESS OUTCOME

Line of business and IT are harmonized, allowing

the cloud to drive innovation. With that mastered, businesses can enable managed risk-taking to deliver IT-enabled products and participate in standards development.

10X

Stage 5 companies are 10 times better than beginners at allocating IT resources to strategic tasks

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MATURITY

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Have adequate

knowledge of cloud

best practices

Have implemented

a unified service

catalog

Have IT staff

skills to use cloud

automation

Have user self-service

provisioning

when they will have

Cannot foresee

consistent

service-level monitoring

across hybrid clouds

38%

35% 34%

32%

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